Kevin Na. Andrew Redington

Kevin Na withdrew from the Masters on Thursday following the completion of his first nine holes.

Na was the first group out on Day 1 but experienced an inauspicious start at Augusta National with a double-bogey at the first and though he birdied the second things did not improve, bogeying three of his next four holes. Na made the turn in 40 strokes before pulling out with an undisclosed illness. Throughout the round Na appeared to be in discomfort.

At the time of his WD, Na was last on the scoreboard. This was his 12th start at the Masters, and he had finished inside the top 15 in his past three Masters appearances.

Na entered his way into this year’s Masters field as one of the top 50 players in the Official World Golf Ranking at the end of 2022. He was one of 18 LIV Golf members in this week’s field.

Mike Weir, who was playing with Na, will finish his round as a single.

Ben Jared

Not much later, Will Zalatoris, one of the fancied players, also withdrew prior to his 1.24pm tee time through injury.

After strong showings in his first two Masters appearances, Zalatoris won’t get a chance to keep the string alive. The eighth-ranked player in the world was scheduled to tee off in the afternoon in a marquee pairing with major winners Collin Morikawa and Matt Fitzpatrick.

Zalatoris, 26, has had a run of injuries and illness in recent months. He had a breakout season in 2022, posting runners-up in the PGA Championship and US Open, and notched his first PGA Tour victory in the playoffs’ FedEx St. Jude Championship. But he suffered two herniated discs in his back at the BMW Championship the next week and shut it down for the rest of the year.

The Wake Forest alum’s best finish this season is a tie for fourth in the Genesis Invitational, but he also had to withdraw from the WGC-Dell Match Play Championship two weeks ago because of a stomach virus that resulted in the already lanky golfer losing seven pounds.

He was sounding very optimistic earlier this week about a return to the Masters, where he finished solo second in his debut in 2021 and tied for sixth last year.

“It’s taken its sweet time to get the full swing to come back, but I think really the last couple weeks we finally have seen some progress,” Zalatoris said on Tuesday.

About the back injury, he explained, “The genesis of it was actually bad right ankle mobility. Because of me not pushing off my right side soon enough and being a very kind of dynamic player with some side bend, my right hip got high and tilt back. We’ve been trying to get me actually to stand closer to the golf ball, so that makes me create space with the ball so I can turn more horizontal as opposed to lateral. It’s been good.”